Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 Raye Ann, Interesting,to hear this subject come up. My 9 year old has always fought with us about getting in the shower. He told us a few years ago that monsters come up through the drain to get him, he doesn't like getting his face wet but yet at the swimming pool shower he has no problem. We talked to his therapist about this and he suggested fighting his imagination with his imagination and he had him come up with a imaginary super hero to help him in the shower. That worked maybe two times and then back to the fight. This has exhausted me because you have to take showers and every time it would be a huge battle with crying and screaming, ugg!! He is a little better now, but I have to stay in the bathroom with him which I think he is getting old for that. I look forward to the day when I can just ask him to go take a shower and he will. The other thing is once he gets in the shower and gets his head wet he wants to stay forever. That part I don't mind as much. Never thought of this as OCD until you brought it up. I also wondered if it was a sensory thing. _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Lee Absher Sent: Saturday, September 02, 2006 12:35 AM Subject: getting " stuck " in the shower I am new to the group and have learned much from reading posts from everyone. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. I wondered if others see the shower as a major OCD issue-- and have any insight into what to do to help-- and whether anyone's teen avoids the shower--maybe because they get " stuck " there. Thanks for any insight. Raye Anne --------------------------------- Get your email and more, right on the new .com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 In a message dated 9/2/2006 12:40:36 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, radljwa@... writes: .. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. Raye Anne Hi - that post was mine. Our dd was diagnosed last January, she was 14yrs... she's 15 now. Her issues are contamination (giving germs to others.... not necessarily getting them herself). She had HORRIBLE times with showers - her longest time was over 3.5 hours at the worst point with OCD. It was exhausting for everyone - especially me, since there were no other females in the family to help out. You had to be in there with her. At the height of her OCD, I was actually washing her. She couldn't do anything herself. She would stand in the shower, crying because she couldn't stop washing. It was awful. The bathroom was referred to as " that place. " She would beg & plead with me " Please mom - don't make me go in that place alone... please help me mommy. " It broke my heart. The frustration was horrible. What is your child's situation? Daughter/son? Age? I'd be happy to email any information I can.... we have company for the weekend & will not be on email quite so much for the next day or two, but let me know what's going on and I'll offer up anything I can. My dd also had issues with laundry - clothing, no matter what, could only be worn once then had to be washed. Her clothing was literally falling apart from over-washing. We also had the excessive hand washing and she had some rituals (which she still does) related to hand washing. There are other things too -- but no time to go into them right now. Is your child in therapy? On meds? LT Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 As for the deleted post, you can go to the group site and find old posts there. My OCDer prefers the shower and avoids the bath. She worries that her toys will go down the drain and wants to put them all away and stay in the tub until all the water is gone, to be sure they wont go down the drain. She is 5 and her younger sister is 3. If she chooses a shower, she wants to watch her sister in the tub when she gets out, to make sure of the toys. Sharon getting " stuck " in the shower I am new to the group and have learned much from reading posts from everyone. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. I wondered if others see the shower as a major OCD issue-- and have any insight into what to do to help-- and whether anyone's teen avoids the shower--maybe because they get " stuck " there. Thanks for any insight. Raye Anne --------------------------------- Get your email and more, right on the new .com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 Could you put a bath matt over the drain? Then he cant see the drain and no monsters can come through it? I think it is sensory, both my girls LOVE standing in the shower with hot water pounding on their backs. Sharon getting " stuck " in the shower I am new to the group and have learned much from reading posts from everyone. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. I wondered if others see the shower as a major OCD issue-- and have any insight into what to do to help-- and whether anyone's teen avoids the shower--maybe because they get " stuck " there. Thanks for any insight. Raye Anne --------------------------------- Get your email and more, right on the new .com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 (17) takes long showers but not overly long (not hours). It hasn't been major for us. But it is OCD affecting his stay in there, as I'll tell him to hurry up and he'll answer he's not sure if he can, in that way that tell me it's OCD involved some way. He has said he likes to stand there, it relaxes him, but that " look " on his face when I tell him to hurry tells " me " there's some OCD. did avoid a lot of things due to OCD and getting stuck. At one time I couldn't blame him, as he could be stuck an hour or hours. But luckily this never included the shower! What he had to actively work on was just trying to shorten his " stuck " times, to get un-stuck sooner; a mental type " push " to himself I guess. > > I am new to the group and have learned much from reading posts from everyone. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. I wondered if others see the shower as a major OCD issue-- and have any insight into what to do to help-- and whether anyone's teen avoids the shower--maybe because they get " stuck " there. Thanks for any insight. Raye Anne > > > --------------------------------- > Get your email and more, right on the new .com > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 LT, My 12 year old son gets stuck in the shower. He also thinks he contaminates other and other things. He takes long HOT showers. He comes out faint with red skin. We also have tons of hand washing. In fact, his hands are cracked as of yesterday and I have a hard time getting him to use lotion. His clothes can only be worn once and sometimes he has to change two or three times per day. He can load the washer but cannot move the clean clothes to the dryer or take them from the dryer and fold them because he will contaminate them before they're even worn. If he has a bad thought while he's getting dressed, those clothes are contaminated before they're even worn and but be washed again. I could go on and on..........sorry. My point is, I definitely can relate to you although I don't have to be in the bathroom with him. His current meds aren't working and we're meeting with a new doc on Tuesday to hopefully transition to something different. We're also exploring the idea of trying some natural supplements to see if that does any good. Is your daughter on meds at all? Any luck? Best of luck to you, Glenda jtlt@... wrote: In a message dated 9/2/2006 12:40:36 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, radljwa@... writes: .. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. Raye Anne Hi - that post was mine. Our dd was diagnosed last January, she was 14yrs... she's 15 now. Her issues are contamination (giving germs to others.... not necessarily getting them herself). She had HORRIBLE times with showers - her longest time was over 3.5 hours at the worst point with OCD. It was exhausting for everyone - especially me, since there were no other females in the family to help out. You had to be in there with her. At the height of her OCD, I was actually washing her. She couldn't do anything herself. She would stand in the shower, crying because she couldn't stop washing. It was awful. The bathroom was referred to as " that place. " She would beg & plead with me " Please mom - don't make me go in that place alone... please help me mommy. " It broke my heart. The frustration was horrible. What is your child's situation? Daughter/son? Age? I'd be happy to email any information I can.... we have company for the weekend & will not be on email quite so much for the next day or two, but let me know what's going on and I'll offer up anything I can. My dd also had issues with laundry - clothing, no matter what, could only be worn once then had to be washed. Her clothing was literally falling apart from over-washing. We also had the excessive hand washing and she had some rituals (which she still does) related to hand washing. There are other things too -- but no time to go into them right now. Is your child in therapy? On meds? LT Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 Mat on the drain, great idea I will have to give that a try! _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of kidsnpets Sent: Saturday, September 02, 2006 8:49 AM Subject: Re: getting " stuck " in the shower Could you put a bath matt over the drain? Then he cant see the drain and no monsters can come through it? I think it is sensory, both my girls LOVE standing in the shower with hot water pounding on their backs. Sharon getting " stuck " in the shower I am new to the group and have learned much from reading posts from everyone. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. I wondered if others see the shower as a major OCD issue-- and have any insight into what to do to help-- and whether anyone's teen avoids the shower--maybe because they get " stuck " there. Thanks for any insight. Raye Anne --------------------------------- Get your email and more, right on the new .com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 2, 2006 Report Share Posted September 2, 2006 I have to admit, I have OCD as well. Never really realized it until dd was diagnosed. But when we moved into this house, I had a HUGE deal about the old owners germs left in the house. It was really hard for me. I put rubber mats on the floors in the tubs/showers, so I wouldnt feel like I was standing where they stood. Later, I was ok with them gone, after we lived here awhile. Then we had a mouse problem and when I would shower, I would imagine mice coming up the drain. Realistically I knew that wouldnt happen, but I had to put the mat back to cover the drain. I dont have it there anymore, but I do think about that almost every single day when I shower. So I can completely understand your ds and the monsters. I hope the mat helps! Sharon getting " stuck " in the shower I am new to the group and have learned much from reading posts from everyone. I accidently deleted an email that mentioned a sibling helping the OCD sister get through being " stuck " in the shower. I wondered if others see the shower as a major OCD issue-- and have any insight into what to do to help-- and whether anyone's teen avoids the shower--maybe because they get " stuck " there. Thanks for any insight. Raye Anne --------------------------------- Get your email and more, right on the new .com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 3, 2006 Report Share Posted September 3, 2006 In a message dated 9/2/2006 9:39:03 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, g_mart1971@... writes: Is your daughter on meds at all? Any luck? Glenda Yes, she was put on Prozac (generic though) in January - started at 10mg & is now up to 50mg. It was the 50mg that was the 'magic' amount. She is completely functional on her own now, back down to the 15-30 minute showers, which is pretty much a regular amount of time for her. It took us 3-4 months on meds to achieve that. Your son won't use lotion because it stings. That was my dd too.... she would cry when she used it. Here's a tip for the hands: immediately remove whatever hand soap you're using in your bathrooms & kitchen and replace it all with Cetaphyl pump soap. Use it until his hands are better (not dry & cracked), then only use non-antibacterial soap in the house. It's not easy to find, but it's out there (everyone is on the big antibacterial kick you know)... anyways you can get it at Target if you have that store by you - the brand name is Method. I also used baby bath liquid soap by & for awhile. The family liked that better because it 'foamed' like regular soap should - the Cetaphyl doesn't... kind of like trying to wash with lotion - ha. As far as the laundry, to save his clothes & your money (on new clothes cuz his will start falling apart soon), I do all the laundry for my daughter - everything goes on cold/cold, knit delicate in the washer. I only actually wash her stuff once a week and every other time during the week (anything other than socks & underwear) just got tossed in the dryer on 'air fluff' with a dryer sheet to freshen them up. She never knew. Thankfully we're over that now too. The Prozac has been a life-saver for us. LT Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 3, 2006 Report Share Posted September 3, 2006 In a message dated 9/3/2006 9:04:44 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, g_mart1971@... writes: Thanks for all the tips!! Maybe we should try the Prozac?? Glenda Well, what works for one person doesn't necessarily work for another -- but as I said, we had GREAT luck with Prozac. Just be sure to increase in very small doses.... again, we only did 10mg each month. Good luck!!! LT Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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